One birthday (for everyone) is a New Year. You are considered a year older after one new year's has gone by.
You can look at it this way. People are born on a certain day, and that is your birthday. However, in China, you are one year older after one new year's has gone by. So in China, you technically can have 2 birthdays. One that is the New Year's that is everyone's birthday and your own birth date.
There is no specific collective noun for birthdays, however a noun suitable for the situation can be used; for example a cluster of birthdays, a series of birthdays, or a respectable century of birthdays.
No. Red just symbolizes money. For birthdays Chinese people receive money in a traditional red envelope.
Birthdays = Geburtstage
Yes. If they were born, then they have birthdays.
China is officially an atheist nation, they have one child policy, so there is not much to celebrate like other nations. They usually hold a small baby shower kind of party.
asian rituals of birthdays?
There is no patron saint of birthdays.
In Bulgaria in place of Birthdays we celebrate.. birthdays. We also have the so called nameday (saint day), but both birthdays and namedays are celebrated.
IF there where no birthdays or months no one will be born
Birthdays of Freedom was created in 1957.
Children on Their Birthdays was created in 2002.